Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System

Chapter 2

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System

What is a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system? Not only is there little agreement on what it really stands for, there is even less agreement on what constitutes a CRM system, how it should be used, the potential of profitability gain, the impact on customer loyalty, the costs involved, the personnel needed, and the training needed for the CRM personnel. CRM system characteristics are not limited to the CRM products and tools that are currently available in the market, and CRM is certainly not a technique or methodology. There is every reason to believe that the boundaries described for CRM in this book will be constantly enlarging in the coming years (see Section 2.2 "Anatomy of a CRM System").

2.1Introduction to Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Systems

Notwithstanding all these caveats, a CRM system could be defined reasonably as follows: A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System is a suite of pre-engineered, ready-toimplement, integrated application modules that focus on automating and optimizing all customer-centric and customer-responsive functions--sales, marketing, service, and support-- of an enterprise and possessing the flexibility for configuring, customizing, and personalizing dynamically the delivered functionality of the package, through any channel of interaction, to suit even the specific requirements of an individual customer. CRM enables an enterprise to operate as a relationship-based, information-driven, integrated, enterprise-wide, process- oriented, real-time, and intelligent customer-centric and customer-responsive enterprise.

CRM System applications provide the framework for executing the best practices in customer-facing activities; it provides a common platform for customer communication and interaction. The use of CRM System applications helps in improving customer responsiveness and also provides a comprehensive view of the entire Customer Life Cycle. With reference to Figure 1.2,

67

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68 Implementing SAP? CRM

one can state that CRM Systems, like CRM, are useful to companies that have customers with large variability both in their needs and their value to the company's business.

A CRM System like SAP CRM can provide this comprehensiveness and flexibility because at the heart of the system resides a CASE-like repository that stores all details of these predeveloped applications. These details include every single data objects, business objects, and user-interface (UI) programs that are used by the complete system. It also has additional support subsystems that help it to manage, secure, and maintain the operations of this package on a day-to-day basis.

Off-the-shelf packages, and especially enterprise-wide solutions such as CRM systems, are considered as the best approach for confronting the software crisis of the 1980s (see the following note on customized vs. packaged solutions). This was because

1. CRM Systems ensure better validation of user requirements directly by the user. 2. CRM Systems ensure consistent quality of delivered functionality. 3. CRM Systems provide a cohesive and integrated information system architecture. 4. CRM Systems ensure a fair degree of standardization. 5. CRM Systems provide a consistent and accurate documentation of the system. 6. CRM Systems provide outstanding quality and productivity in the development and main-

tenance of the system.

Half a decade later, as companies are reporting their experiences in implementing a CRM System, a base of experience seems to support the fact that companies that plan and manage the use of CRM System are usually successful. Today, the recognized management decision is not whether to use CRM System, but rather when to use CRM System and which CRM System to use. As we go through this book, it will become evident that SAP CRM is the best-of-breed product in this genre.

The success of CRM Systems is based on the principle of reusability. The origin of reusability goes back almost to the beginning of the computer era, when it was recognized that far too much program code was being written and rewritten repeatedly and uneconomically. Very soon, most of the programming languages provided for routines or packets of logic that could be reused multiple times within individual programs or even by a group of programs. Databases enabled the reuse of data, resulting in a tremendous surge in programmer productivity. Similarly, networks permitted reuse of the same programs on different terminals or workstations at different locations.

CRM Systems, like ERPs, extended the concept of reusability to the functionality provided by a system. For instance, SAP CRM was based on the essential commonality observed in the functioning of companies within an industry. SAP built a reusable library of normally required processes in a particular industry, and all that implementing SAP CRM customers had to do was to select from this library all those processes that were required by their company. From the project effort and cost that were essential for the development and implementation using the traditional software development life cycle (SDLC), CRM reduced the project effort and cost to that associated only with the implementation phase of the SDLC. Even though the cost of implementing a CRM System like SAP CRM might seem higher than that of traditional system, the CRM system gets implemented sooner and therefore starts delivering all of its benefits much earlier than the traditional systems.

Although there have not been any published results as yet, it has become an accepted fact that enterprises that implemented CRM systems for only a part of their organizations, or for only a few select functions within their organizations, did not benefit greatly. CRM Systems, like ERPs earlier, recognize the fact that business processes of an organization were much more fundamental than data characterizing various aspects of the organization. Most importantly, CRM systems

From "Implementing SAP? CRM: The Guide for Business and Technology Managers" by Vivek Kale ISBN 978-1-4822-3142-7. ? 2015 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System 69

elevated information systems from a mere enabler of the business strategy of an organization to a significant part of the business strategy itself.

Thus, CRM Systems brought to an end the subsidiary and support role that IT had played throughout the last few decades. But in turn, the very nature of IS has also undergone a complete transformation. Implementing a CRM System within an enterprise is no longer a problem of technology; it is a business problem. CRM Systems have been the harbingers of a paradigm shift in the role of the IS/IT function within an enterprise. This book was motivated by the need to address these fundamental changes in the very nature of IS/IT activity within an enterprise.

The distinguishing characteristics of a CRM system are

CRM System transforms an enterprise into an information-driven enterprise. CRM System fundamentally perceives an enterprise as a global enterprise. CRM System reflects and mimics the integrated nature of an enterprise. CRM System fundamentally models a process-oriented enterprise. CRM System enables the real-time enterprise. CRM System enables the intelligent enterprise. CRM System elevates IT strategy as a part of the business strategy. CRM System represents Advance on the approaches to Manufacturing Performance

Improvement. CRM System represents the new Department Store model of implementing computerized

systems. CRM System is a mass-user-oriented application environment.

We have differentiated between the concepts of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) and Customer Relationship Management Systems (CRM Systems) that implement possibly a part of this holistic concept. This book mainly relates to SAP CRM as a system to realize the CRM programs of a company; hereafter, for the sake of convenience, by CRM, we will usually refer to aspects of a comprehensive CRM Program that are embodied into a CRM System like SAP CRM implemented within the enterprise.

2.1.1CRM Transforms an Enterprise into an Information-Driven Enterprise

All computerized systems and solutions in the past used past-facing information merely for the purpose of referrals and reporting only. ERP, for the first time in the history of computerized systems, began treating information as a resource for the operational requirements of the enterprise. But unlike the traditional resources, information resource as made available by CRMs (and ERPs) can be reused and shared multiply without dissipation or degradation. The impressive productivity gains resulting from the CRMs truthfully arise from the unique characteristic of CRMs (and, earlier, ERPs) to use information as an inexhaustible resource.

Customer interactions, which are the mainstay of CRMs, create real-time organizational knowledge providing insights into the customer behavior. CRMs enable an organization to use the real-time knowledge and information gained at any touch point to manage and synchronize the communications and marketing messages it delivers to its customers in all its touch point applications.

From "Implementing SAP? CRM: The Guide for Business and Technology Managers" by Vivek Kale ISBN 978-1-4822-3142-7. ? 2015 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

70 Implementing SAP? CRM

This is also the root of one of the major problems leading to failures of SAP CRM implementations. Sales persons, sales consultants, and sales managers are extremely possessive of their customers and related interaction information; such withholding of critical customer information prevents the information stored in CRMs to be treated fully as customer relationships and to be leveraged for maximum benefit.

2.1.2 CRM Perceives an Enterprise as a Global Enterprise

In these times of divestitures, mergers, and acquisitions, this is an important requirement. Unlike some of the earlier enterprise-wide solutions available on mainframes, CRM packages like SAP CRM cater to corporation-wide requirements even if an organization is involved in disparate businesses such as discrete industries (manufacturing, engineering, and so on), process industries (chemicals, paints, and so on), and service industries (banking, media, and so on). CRM packages enable the management to plan, operate, and manage such conglomerates without the impediment of mismatching systems for different divisions.

Although it might seem a minor point, CRM packages also permit the important functionality of enabling seamless integration of distributed or multilocation operations; we consider this aspect in the next subsection.

2.1.3 CRM Reflects and Mimics the Integrated Nature of an Enterprise

By promoting cross functional processes and work teams, CRM, like SAP CRM, provides a powerful medium for supporting, reconciling, and optimizing the conflicting goals of different functions within an organization. For instance, marketing may want production of more customized products to cater to the requirements in the market, whereas production function will want to standardize products for reducing setup times and related costs. The tussle between these two functions may result in releasing products that incur (say) five times the normal failure rates, the brunt of which is borne by the service function. Thus, marketing and to a large extent manufacturing obtain their short-term sales forecasts at the expense of the service function. The longer-term adverse effect on customer retention and loyalty may not even become evident until after many months have elapsed.

Companies interact with their customers across a variety of channels: offline channels such as branch stores and direct mail, as well as online channel as call centers, e-mail, and the Internet. In any CVM strategy, all of these interactions are part of an integrated communications strategy to realize the full value-creation potential of these interactions. In fact, as customers continue to use more channels to interact with the enterprise, the company must ensure that it has the infrastructure to provide consistent and optimal marketing messages across each of its touch point applications.

CRM provides an integrated view of an enterprise's customers to everyone in the organization so that the customer can be serviced effectively throughout the customer life cycle. For instance, if marketing runs an outbound campaign, all the information about the customers and the program should be retained for

The salespeople to follow up The customer service people to answer any queries Technical support to provide any field support

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Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System 71

Similarly, CRM enables even the customer to experience that they are dealing with the different functions of the same enterprise rather than independent departments that force them to run from pillar to post when trying to meet their demands.

2.1.4 CRM Fundamentally Models a Process-Oriented Enterprise

As organizational and environmental conditions become more complex, globalized, and competitive, processes provide a framework for dealing effectively with the issues of performance improvement, capability development, and adaptation to the changing environment. Process modeling permits the true nature of the characteristic structure and dynamics of the business.

Conventional systems primarily store only snapshots of customer interactions in terms of discrete groups of data at predefined or configured instants of time, along a business process within an organization. This predominating data-oriented view of the enterprise as implemented by traditional IT systems is a most unnatural and alien way of looking at any area of human activity. The stability of the data models, as canonized in the conventional IT paradigm, might have been advantageous for the systems personnel, but for the same reason, it would have been unusable (and unacceptable) to the business stakeholders within the organizations. Traditional systems could never really resolve this simple dichotomy of the fact that systems based on leveraging the unchanging data models, although easy to maintain, can never describe the essentially dynamic nature of businesses. This is the postmodern version of C. P. Snow's Two Cultures, which he had initially mooted to talk meaningfully about the worlds of humanities and sciences in the middle of the last century. Business processes are the most important portions of the reality that had been ignored by the traditional information systems. The traditional IT process modeling techniques, methodologies, and environments are a misnomer, for they truly model only the procedures for operating on the data associated at various points of the business subprocesses--which themselves are never mirrored within the system.

CRM packages recognized the fundamental error that was perpetuated all these past decades. Although many CRM packages still carry the legacy of the data-oriented view, the parallel view of business process and business rules is gaining prominence rapidly. This is the reason for the rapidly maturing groupware and workflow subsystems within the core architecture of current CRM systems.

2.1.5 CRM Enables the Real-Time Enterprise

The real-time responsiveness of the enterprise coupled with the enterprise-wide integration mentioned earlier also enables enterprises the powerful capability of concurrent processing, which would be impossible without systems like SAP CRM. Enterprises can obtain tremendous efficiencies and throughputs because of this ability to administer in parallel many processes that are related but independent of each other. In non-ERP enterprises, such closely related processes are typically done sequentially because they are usually handled by the same set of personnel, who may obviously be constrained to address them only in a sequence.

Customer responsiveness is an outcome of real-time sharing of current, complete, and consistent information on interactions with individual customers. Furthermore, it implies instantaneous, transparent connectivity and visibility between customer-facing processes with the corresponding order fulfilling processes. This visibility not only permits the salesman to give accurate availableto-promise (ATP) information to the customer but also enables him to assess for himself the latest capable-to-promise (CTP) status for a particular order prior to making any commitments. In turn, the various members of the supply chain also have a better visibility and understanding of the

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72 Implementing SAP? CRM

customer requirements and commitments made to the customer, thus ensuring on-time delivery (OTD). The tight integration with the fulfillment processes enables coordination, monitoring, and managing of goods across the ECE; it also provides instant notifications and alerts on exceptions and problem that may delay the on-time delivery of the order.

Furthermore, this integration also helps in matching the growing trend of customers postponing the buying decision closer to the purchasing decision with the corresponding ability of the enterprise to postpone the point of product differentiation as close as possible to the point of demand by the customer. Every action of the customer needs to be met by a highly automated and tightly integrated response across the supply chain to fulfill the need. More succinctly, one can say that sell one, make one has become the manufacturing watchword and corresponds closely to the current marketing watchword of the market of one.

2.1.6 CRM Enables the Intelligent Enterprise

The ability to access, collect, and analyze information in real term is an essential prerequisite of a customer-responsive enterprise. For remaining competitive, providing good customer service, and optimizing e-business operations, enterprises have to enable a zero latency enterprise (ZLE) that supports real-term decision processing providing rapid access to information and analyses from any place at any time for making real-term business decisions. Such decision processing systems are also required to integrate with the corresponding business processes to attain a closed-loop system whereby the output of the decision processing applications is delivered as inputs to influence favorably the business operations of the enterprise.

A real-term decision processing system typically consists of

An event-driven hub that (via messaging and EAI) captures, transforms, and loads operational data into a data warehouse

An analysis engine that generates business analyses from any place at any time A rule-driven decision engine that generates recommendations or e-business action messages

in the real term

Business Intelligence (BI) applications are decision support tools that enable real-time, interactive access, analysis, and manipulation of mission-critical corporate information to provide users with valuable insights into key indicators to identify business problems and opportunities. BI enables users to access and leverage vast amount of information to analyze relationships and trends to support real-term business decisions. BI systems enable enterprises to become proactive and information agile (see Chapter 1, Sections 1.3.8 "Agile Enterprise" and 7.1.3 "Enterprise Agility") by delivering information to

Empower enterprise users in the assessment, enhancement, and optimization of organizational operations and performance

Deliver real-term business information to users about customer and partners

2.1.7 CRM Elevates IT Strategy as a Part of the Business Strategy

The coming of CRM heralded an enhanced role for IT systems. They are no longer the support functions of the earlier years. If someone is under that illusion, he or she will pay a very high price. Today, the real focus of IS/IT systems is no longer its alignment with the business strategy of the enterprise, but with that of the customer.

From "Implementing SAP? CRM: The Guide for Business and Technology Managers" by Vivek Kale ISBN 978-1-4822-3142-7. ? 2015 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System 73

1690 1890 1900 1920 1930 1950 1960 1970 1970 1980 1980 1980 1980 1980 1980 1990 1990 1990 1990 1990

Division of Labor

Adam Smith

Scientific Measurement

Frederick Taylor

Mass Production

Henry Ford

Industrial Engineering

F. Gilbreth and Frederick Taylor

Human Relations Movement

Elton Mayo

Japanese Quality Revolution

J. M. Juran and W. E. Deming

Material Requirement Planning

William Orlicky

Manufacturing Resource Planning Oliver Wright

Focused Factory

Wickham Skinner

Total Quality Management

Philip Crosby

Just-in-Time

Taiichi Ohno

Computer Integrated Manufacturing

Optimized Production Technology Eliyahu Goldratt

ISO 9000

NASI

World Class Manufacturing

Richard Schonberger

Mass Customization

Stan Davis and B. Joseph Pine II

Lean Manufacturing

Jones and Roos

Business Process Re-Engineering

Michael Hammer

Enterprise Resource Planning

Customer Relationship Management Frederick Reichheld

Figure 2.1 Timeline of performance improvement movements in the twentieth century.

2.1.8CRM Advances on the Earlier Approaches to Performance Improvement

CRM is the latest in the succession of approaches that have been adopted throughout the history of enterprises for the improvement of enterprise-level performances. CRMs have realized the failed dream of improvements that were expected from the MRP-II-based Manufacturing Resource Planning systems of the 1970s. CRMs have enabled combining the hard approach of Quality Function Deployment (QFD) with the much broad-scoped soft approaches to customer satisfaction like support and services that were widely adopted during the 1980s in the last century. Figure 2.1 gives a list of major enterprise performance improvement movements during the last century. CRMs like SAP CRM provide the basic platform for devising techniques and tools for better implementations of the earlier approaches.

2.1.9CRM Represents the New Department Store Model of Implementing Computerized Systems

The coming of packaged solutions like CRM (like the ERP before them) has been the death knell of the development model of IS systems. Along with it went the concept of requirements capture, modeling languages, development of software programs, testing, and so on that have

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74 Implementing SAP? CRM

usually been associated with the conventional developmental model. In its place, for the first time, is the end-user friendly model of what one could call the Department Store model of computerized systems: you pick and choose the functionality you require from the array of functional goodies on display!

Today, an organization solves critical information management need by purchasing the best-of-class application software package available in the relevant domain. This package is then configured, customized, and integrated to its specific requirements. The benefits of such an approach over the traditional full custom development project include

Immediate access to the best technologies and industry practices, that is, typical package represents the synthesis of many years of business analysis and software engineering

Quick return on investment (ROI) because the organization can begin to implement and deploy a packaged application immediately

Lower software application life-cycle costs in every aspect: business and technical expertise, initial configuration and customization, maintenance, and future enhancements

Mitigation of financial and delivery risks Much higher probability of overall success due to the use of a proven solution

A comprehensive CRM, like SAP CRM, is the analog of the great Department Store of functionalities or processes required within an organization. CRM makes the transition from the world of carefully engineered and running systems to the world of consumers, in which the value of the delivered functionality is based not on its pedigree, but only on what, how, where, and when it can be used gainfully.

This then is the final commoditization of the IS/IT products and services!

In the past few decades, all of us have witnessed a procession of different methodologies, tools, and techniques emanating from this industry that have had tremendous impact on the very nature and operations of business enterprises. But in the midst of all this turmoil, one fact has remained constant, and that has been the lack of productivity improvements, irrespective of the extent and nature of computerization. But right from the start, there was an even more basic problem in terms of the number of software applications that were actually completed and implemented successfully. Much has been written on the software crisis that was engulfing information service groups in the 1980s. The reasons were multifold:

With the advent of PC-like functionalities, users were becoming more aware and demanding.

Consequently, applications were becoming more bigger and complex. Correspondingly, productivity was reducing rather than increasing. Software development times were increasing, and cost and time overruns were fairly

routine. Quality, trained professionals were always in short supply, resulting in increased costs

for programmers; hence, systems development costs were ever increasing. Mortality of systems was very high.

From "Implementing SAP? CRM: The Guide for Business and Technology Managers" by Vivek Kale ISBN 978-1-4822-3142-7. ? 2015 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC

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